Étude de marché sur la zoologie

Qu'est-ce que c'est?
La zoologie, une branche de la biologie que certains experts appellent science animale, étudie le règne animal et la vie animale. Il contient des informations sur la structure animale et la composition moléculaire. Les relations entre les animaux, les plantes et les objets non vivants sont également étudiées.
La zoologie est à la fois une science fondamentale et appliquée. Les travailleurs des sciences fondamentales se concentrent sur la connaissance des animaux. Ils ne se soucient pas de l’utilisation de ces connaissances. Mais la science appliquée se concentre sur la manière dont cette étude peut aider les humains et les animaux. Par exemple, le domaine de la médecine utilise les sciences appliquées.
Dans ce vaste domaine, il existe de nombreuses sous-disciplines. Ceux-ci se concentrent sur des parties spécifiques de la vie animale. Par exemple, l'entomologie se concentre sur les insectes.
Zoology Market Research: How Leading Firms Convert Animal Science Into Commercial Advantage
Zoology market research translates animal biology, behavior, and ecology into commercial intelligence for industries that depend on living systems. The buyers are pharmaceutical R&D heads, aquaculture operators, zoo and aquarium directors, pet nutrition manufacturers, conservation funders, and agricultural biotech firms. Each treats zoological insight as a direct input to product pipelines, capital allocation, and regulatory positioning.
The category is broader than most executives assume. It spans companion animal health, livestock genetics, marine science, exotic species trade compliance, vector ecology for public health, and wildlife economics tied to land use. Firms that approach zoology market research as a standalone discipline, rather than a footnote to veterinary or agricultural studies, capture pricing power competitors miss.
The Commercial Boundaries of Zoology Market Research
Zoology market research sits at the intersection of life sciences, industrial supply chains, and regulated consumer markets. A pet food formulator buying palatability data, a Zoetis competitor sizing the small ruminant parasiticide opportunity, and a public aquarium evaluating attendance elasticity all require the same underlying capability: structured intelligence about animals, the people who manage them, and the regulators who govern both.
The primary verticals carry distinct economics. Companion animal health, dominated by Zoetis, Elanco, and Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health, runs on prescription channel dynamics and veterinarian prescribing behavior. Aquaculture, led by names such as Mowi and Cargill Aqua Nutrition, hinges on feed conversion ratios and disease pressure modeling. Conservation-linked markets, including ecotourism operators and CITES-regulated trade, depend on permit pipelines and population monitoring data that few commercial datasets capture cleanly.
SIS International Research has observed that buyers in animal health and aquaculture consistently underestimate the value of structured expert interviews with field veterinarians, hatchery managers, and zoological curators, defaulting instead to syndicated reports that miss species-level demand signals. The mechanism is simple. Syndicated data aggregates across species and geographies. Commercial decisions are made one species, one corridor, one regulatory jurisdiction at a time.
Where the Growth Is Concentrated
Four segments are pulling capital into zoology-adjacent commercial research. Companion animal premiumization continues to expand, with humanization of pets driving willingness to pay for therapeutics, diagnostics, and functional nutrition. Aquaculture is absorbing investment as wild fishery yields plateau and protein demand rises across Asia and the Gulf. Vector ecology research, tied to Aedes and tick-borne disease management, is funded by both public health agencies and crop protection firms. Wildlife economics, including private game reserves and biodiversity offset markets under frameworks such as the EU Nature Restoration Regulation, is becoming a measurable asset class.
Each segment rewards a different research instrument. Companion animal categories respond to central location tests for palatability, conjoint analysis on therapeutic attributes, and ethnographic observation of feeding rituals in pet households. Aquaculture decisions hinge on B2B expert interviews with hatchery and grow-out operators, plus competitive intelligence on feed formulation and vaccine pipelines. Conservation-linked investments require stakeholder mapping across NGOs, regulators, and indigenous landholders that no panel can deliver.
What the Best-Run Programs Do Differently
Leading firms separate zoological evidence from veterinary evidence. The veterinarian is a channel actor with prescribing economics. The zoologist, fisheries biologist, or curator is a substrate expert who understands the animal itself. Confusing the two produces research that explains the sales funnel but misses the biological constraint that determines product ceiling.
The second move is geographic specificity. Bovine genetics in Brazil behave differently from bovine genetics in Ireland because Nelore and Holstein populations face different parasite loads, climates, and producer economics. Companion animal markets in Japan and Germany reward different protein sources because of cultural feeding norms. Across SIS International’s market entry assessments in animal health and aquaculture across Latin America, Southeast Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa, species-by-country segmentation has consistently surfaced revenue pools that regional aggregations conceal.
The third move is methodological discipline on observational data. Ethnographic research in pet households, accompanied shopping at veterinary clinics, and on-site work at hatcheries and zoos produce evidence that survey instruments cannot reach. Buyers who treat these as optional add-ons leave the highest-margin insights on the table.
The SIS Zoology Intelligence Framework
A useful structure for scoping zoology market research engagements separates the work into four layers. Each layer answers a distinct commercial question and uses a distinct method.
| Layer | Commercial Question | Primary Method |
|---|---|---|
| Substrate | What does the animal require, tolerate, or reject? | Expert interviews with zoologists, ethologists, fisheries biologists |
| Operator | How do owners, producers, or curators make decisions? | B2B interviews, ethnographic observation, accompanied visits |
| Channel | How do products reach the animal? | Veterinarian and distributor surveys, retail audits, CLTs |
| Regulator | What permissions, restrictions, and incentives apply? | Policy mapping, CITES and FDA-CVM tracking, stakeholder interviews |
Source: SIS International Research
Engagements that cover all four layers produce defensible market sizing. Engagements that skip the substrate or regulator layers produce forecasts that collapse on contact with field reality.
Named Players and Reference Points
Buyers benchmarking zoology market research vendors should anchor on the actual industrial counterparties. Zoetis and Elanco set the reference for companion animal therapeutics. Mars Petcare, Nestlé Purina, and Hill’s Pet Nutrition define the nutrition category. Mowi, SalMar, and Cooke Aquaculture frame the salmon production benchmark. The Wildlife Conservation Society, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, and the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria shape institutional standards. Regulatory anchors include the FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine, the European Medicines Agency Committee for Veterinary Medicinal Products, and CITES under the UNEP umbrella.
Pricing intelligence in this category is uneven. Animal health therapeutics are reasonably transparent through prescribing data. Aquaculture feed and vaccine pricing requires direct producer interviews. Zoo and aquarium attendance economics are visible through AZA-affiliated benchmarks. Exotic species and conservation-linked revenue streams require primary work in nearly every case.
Where Zoology Market Research Creates Compounding Value
The compounding value sits in pipeline decisions. A correctly scoped study on small ruminant parasiticide resistance in East Africa redirects R&D dollars years before competitors recognize the shift. A precise read on koi and ornamental fish demand in the Gulf reframes a distributor acquisition. An ethological study on enrichment preferences across captive primate populations changes capital planning for an entire zoo network.
VP-level buyers asking why zoology market research deserves a discrete budget line should look at the alternative. Generalist consumer or industrial studies miss the species, the regulator, and the operator. Specialist zoology intelligence, executed with named methodologies and field-grade evidence, becomes a durable input to pricing, positioning, and portfolio strategy.
À propos de SIS International
SIS International propose des recherches quantitatives, qualitatives et stratégiques. Nous fournissons des données, des outils, des stratégies, des rapports et des informations pour la prise de décision. Nous menons également des entretiens, des enquêtes, des groupes de discussion et d’autres méthodes et approches d’études de marché. Contactez nous pour votre prochain projet d'étude de marché.


